|
See also: American general, was See also: born in Hadley, Massachusetts, on the 13th of See also: November 1814
.
He was educated at the military See also: academy at West Point (1833-1837), and on graduating entered the 1st U
.
S
.
Artillery
.
In the war with Mexico (1846–48) he served as a staff officer, and See also: rose by successive brevets for meritorious services to the See also: rank of See also: lieutenant-colonel
.
In 1853 he See also: left the service and bought a large See also: farm near Sonoma, Cal., which he managed successfully till 1858, when he was made See also: superintendent of military roads in See also: Oregon
.
Upon the opening of hostilities in the See also: Civil War of 1861-65, he sacrificed his See also: fine estate and offered his sword to the Federal See also: Government
.
He was commissioned brigadier-general of See also: volunteers on the 17th of May 1861 and major-general on the 5th of May 1862
.
The engagement of See also: Williamsburg (May 5th) brought him and his subordinate Hancock into prominence, and See also: Hooker received the soubriquet of "Fighting Joe." He was engaged at the
See also: battle of See also: Fair Oaks, and did splendid service to the Union army during the " Seven Days." In the See also: campaign of See also: Northern Virginia, under General See also: Pope (See also: August 1862), he led his division with fiery energy at Bristoe Station, See also: Manassas and See also: Chantilly
.
In the See also: Maryland campaign (See also: September) he was at the See also: head of the I. corps, Army of the See also: Potomac. forced the See also: defile of See also: South See also: Mountain and opened the way for the advance of the army
.
The I. corps opened the See also: great battle of the See also: Antietam, and sustained a sanguinary fight with the Confederates under Stonewall See also: Jackson
.
Hooker himself was severely wounded
.
He was commissioned brigadier-general in the See also: United States army on the loth of September 1862, and in the battle of Fredericksburg (q.v.), under Burnside, he commanded the centre See also: grand division (III. and V. corps)
.
He had protested against the useless slaughter of his men on that disastrous See also: field, and when Burnside resigned the command Hooker succeeded him
.
The new
See also: leader effected a much-needed re-organization in the army, which had fought many battles without success
.
In this task, as in subordinate commands in battle, Hooker was excelled by few
.
But his See also: grave defects as a See also: commander-in-chief were soon to be obvious
.
By a well-planned and well-executed flanking See also: movement, he placed himself on the enemy's flank, but at the decisive moment he checked the advance of his troops
.
See also: Lee turned upon him, Jackson surprised and destroyed a whole army corps, and the battle of
See also: Chancellorsville (see See also: WILDERNESS), in which Hooker was himself disabled, ended in a retreat to the old position
.
Yet Hooker had not entirely forfeited the confidence of his men, to whom he was still "Fighting Joe." The second advance of Lee into
Union territory, which led to the battle of See also: Gettysburg, was strenuously resisted by Hooker, who would have inflicted a heavy See also: blow on Lee's scattered forces had he not been condemned to inaction by orders from See also: Washington
.
Even then Hooker followed the Confederates a See also: day only behind them, until, finding himself distrusted and forbidden to control the movements of troops within the sphere of operations, he resigned the command on the See also: eve of the battle (See also: June 28, 1863)
.
Faults of temper and an excessive sense of responsibility made his continued occupation of the command impossible, but when after a See also: signal defeat Rosecrans was besieged in See also: Chattanooga, and See also: Grant. with all the forces of the West was hurried to the rescue, two corps of the Army of the Potomac were sent over by
See also: rail, and Hooker, who was at least one of the finest fighting generals of the service, went with them in command
.
He fought and won the " Battle above the Clouds " on Lookout Mountain which cleared the way for the crowning victory of the army of the See also: Cumberland on Missionary See also: Ridge (see CHATTANOOGA)
.
And in command of the same corps (consolidated as the XX. corps) he took See also: part in all the battles and combats of the See also: Atlanta campaign of 1864
.
When General McPherson was killed before Atlanta, the command of Grant's old Army of the See also: Tennessee See also: fell vacant
.
Hooker, who, though only a corps commander, was See also: senior to the other army commanders, See also: Thomas and
See also: Schofield, was normally entitled to receive it, but General Sherman feared to commit a whole army to the guidance of a See also: man of Hooker's See also: peculiar temperament, and the place was given. to See also: Howard
.
Hooker thereupon left the army
.
He was commissioned brevetmajor-general in the United States army on the r3th of See also: March 1865, and retired from active service with the full rank of major-general on the 15th of
See also: October 1868, in consequence of a paralytic seizure
.
The last years of his See also: life were passed in the neighbourhood of New See also: York
.
He died at Garden City, Long See also: Island, on the 31st of October 1879
.
|
|
|
[back] ROBERT HOOKE (1635–1703) |
[next] RICHARD HOOKER (1553-1600) |
That was a touching article;/
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.